Festival Archive 1952-2019

The MIFF online archive contains 68 past editions of the festival (1952–2019) for you to browse or search through. We hope the archive will be a resource used by festival goers, film lovers, students, historians and whoever else would like to learn more about the types of films MIFF has screened over the years, or to track the trajectory of the festival’s curatorship, its directors and its scope.

Search options currently include: ‘Festival Year’, ‘Film Title’, ‘Director’ and ‘Country’.

A big thank you to our MIFF volunteers and partners who have helped make this archive possible.

Please note: this archive is an ongoing body of work. With over 12,000 film synopses and more than 9000 directors’ names, there may appear a few typos here and there as our database comes to terms with special characters (my, there was a huge amount of Eastern European cinema screened at the festival back in the 60s!) and other items that need manual tweaking. Similarly, sometimes the credit information (director, year etc) isn’t available so these fields may be left blank; we are slowly filling these in with further research. 


MIFF2009

Festival Program
253 feature films and 86 short films were screened from 24 July to 9 August
Full Program

Program in Focus
The 2009 MIFF program continued to feature International Panorama, Documentaries, music documentaries and late night cult and horror films. New Balkan cinema featured, along with 5 feature MIFF Premiere Fund films co-financed by the Festival and the Victorian Government. Other program streams centred on retribution, human rights violations and films from the Japanese nuberu bagu of the 1960s. Arts and Minds celebrated the creative spirit, while other sections of the program focused on films dedicated to the adolescent gaze and the Australian post-punk underground. A slate of events took place, highlighted by a visit from Quentin Tarantino who introduced Inglourious Basterds, with the film's stars Diana Kruger and Christopher Waltz. British film composer Michael Nyman and Nicolas Winding Refn were also guests of the festival. 

Filmmaker in Focus
Anna Karina. Karina was a guest of the Festival, a retrospective of her work was screened.
{focus Anna Karina}

Opening Night Film
Balibo (Robert Connolly, 2008)  
More

This is the time of year to Think Big and Think MIFF; turn off your mobiles and laptops and focus on MIFF's big screens.

This year's Opening Night film, Robert Connolly's Balibo, is a complete change of tone from the opener of MIFF 08. It's a powerful political drama set to test the heartstrings and our relationship with Indonesia. Fast forward to our gala finale on August 8th, when we finish with an exuberant musical flourish in Rachel Perkins's Bran Nue Dae. Between these two extremes of contemporary Australian filmmaking lies another packed and varied program – including three more films from our own MIFF Premiere Fund.

As well as the warmth and comfort of your old favourite slots, this year the programming team has devised eight new programming streams – try Young Blood, Vengeance is Mine, Arts and Minds, or Eros + Massacre for a start. Be bold in your film selections, watch our website for updates and if you haven't yet joined up as a MIFF member please consider it. We're worth it.  

Richard Moore
Executive Director


Dear Miffological creatures,

Welcome again to one of the world's most revered and talked about film festivals. I was in Toronto last year promoting $9.99 (another smart animation feature expanding our reputation as highly original risk-takers); despite its commercial marketplace profile, the Canadian audiences are fabulous film buffs and they eye MIFF's expansive and eclectic global programming with a healthy degree of envy.

I've been away peddling some of our homegrown theatre on Broadway for the past five months and have returned to witness the blinding flash of an extraordinary explosion in local production, of thrilling and daring dimensions. Raw, funny, potent, beautiful filmmaking. I had an epiphany last December when I was standing on a beach in a heavy cassock in 45-degree heat shooting Bran Nue Dae. As an actor I couldn't believe I was performing in that rarest of genres – the indigenous Australian film musical. Broome rocks. You can jive in the aisles with that one on Closing Night. The punchy and powerful Balibo lights the fuse on Opening Night and in between you can reel from screen to screen, from country to country and feel the pulse of the planet. It's really pumping. Thanks, Richard and all of your team for this extraordinary annual fix.

Geoffrey Rush
MIFF Patron 

Introduction taken from the 2009 official guide

Select Festival

Search the film archive